International Indigenous Peoples Summit
on Sustainable Development
28 August 2002/The Kimberley Declaration/English/FINAL
The Kimberley Declaration |
International Indigenous Peoples Summit on Sustainable Development
Khoi-San Territory
Kimberley, South Africa, 20-23 August 2002
We, the Indigenous Peoples, walk to the future in the
footprints of our ancestors
(Kari-Oca Declaration, Brazil, 30 May 1992)
We the Indigenous Peoples of the World assembled here reaffirm
the Kari-Oca Declaration and the Indigenous Peoples Earth Charter. We
again reaffirm our our previous declarations on human and environmental sustainability.*
Since
1992 the ecosystems of the earth have been compounding in change. We
are in crisis. We are in an accelerating spiral of climate change
that will not abide unsustainable greed.
Today we reaffirm our relationship to Mother Earth and our
responsibility to coming generations to uphold peace, equity and justice. We
continue to pursue the commitments made at Earth Summit as reflected in this
political declaration and the accompanying plan of action. The commitments which
were made to Indigenous Peoples in Agenda 21, including our full and effective
participation, have not been implemented due to the lack of political will.
As peoples, we reaffirm our rightss to self-determination
and to own, control and manage our ancestral lands and territories, waters and
other resources. Our lands and territories are at the core of our existence
we are the land and the land is us; we have a distinct spiritual and
material relationship with our lands and territories and they are inextricably
linked to our survival and to the preservation and further development of our
knowledge systems and cultures, conservation and sustainable use of biodiversity
and ecosystem management.
We
have the right to determine and establish priorities and strategies
for our self-development and for the use of our lands, territories
and other resources. We demand that free, prior and informed consent
must be the principle of approving or rejecting any project or
activity affecting our lands, territories and other resources.
We are the original peoples tied to the land by our umbilical
cords and the dust of our ancestors. Our special places are sacred and demand
the highest respect. Disturbing the remains of our families and elders is desecration
of the greatest magnitude and constitutes a grave violation of
our human rights. We call for the full and immediate repatriation of all Khoi-San
human remains currently held in museums and other institutions throughout the
world, as well as all the human remains of all other Indigenous Peoples. We
maintain the rights to our sacred and ceremonial sites and ancestral remains,
including access to burial, archaeological and historic sites.
The
national, regional and international acceptance and recognition of
Indigenous Peoples is central to the achievement of human and
environmental sustainability. Our traditional knowledge systems must
be respected, promoted and protected; our collective intellectual
property rights must be guaranteed and ensured. Our traditional
knowledge is not in the public domain; it is collective, cultural and
intellectual property protected under our customary law. Unauthorized
use and misappropriation of traditional knowledge is theft.
Economic globalization constitutes one of the main obstacles for the recognition
of the rights of Indigenous Peoples. Transnational corporations and industrialized
countries impose their global agenda on the negotiations and agreements of the
United Nations system, the World Bank, the International Monetary Fund, the
World Trade Organization and other bodies which reduce the rights enshrined
in national constitutions and in international conventions and agreements. Unsustainable
extraction, harvesting, production and consumption patterns lead to climate
change, widespread pollution and environmental destruction, evicting us from
our lands and creating immense levels of poverty and disease.
We are deeply concerned that the activities of multinational
mining corporations on Indigenous lands have led to the loss and desecration
of our lands, as exemplified here on Khoi-San territory. These activities have
caused immense health problems, interfered with access to, and occupation of
our sacred sites, destroyed and depleted Mother Earth, and undermined our cultures.
Indigenous Peoples, our lands and territories are not objects
of tourism development. We have rights and responsibilities towards our lands
and territories. We are responsible to defend our lands, territories and indigenous
peoples against tourism exploitation by governments, development agencies, private
enterprises, NGOs, and individuals.
Recognizing the vital role that pastoralism and hunting-gathering
play in the livelihoods of many Indigenous Peoples, we urge governments to recognize,
accept, support and invest in pastoralism and hunting-gathering as viable and
sustainable economic systems.
We reaffirm the rights of our peoples, nations and communities,
our women, men, elders and youth to physical, mental, social, and spiritual
well-being.
We are determined to ensure the equal participation of all
Indigenous Peoples throughout the world in all aspects of planning for a sustainable
future with the inclusion of women, men, elders and youth. Equal access to resources
is required to achieve this participation.
We
urge the United Nations to promote respect for the recognition,
observance and enforcement of treaties, agreements and other
constructive arrangements concluded between Indigenous Peoples and
States, or their successors, according to their original spirit and
intent, and to have States honor and respect such treaties,
agreements and other constructive arrangements.
Language is the voice of our ancestors from the beginning of time. The preservation,
securing and development of our languages is a matter of extreme urgency. Language
is part of the soul of our nations, our being and the pathway to the future.
In case of the establishment of partnerships in order to achieve human and
environmental sustainability, these partnerships must beindigenous peoples established
according to the following principles: our rights to the land and to self-determination;
honesty, transparency and good faith; free, prior and informed consent; respect
and recognition of our cultures, languages and spiritual beliefs.
We welcome the establishment of the United Nations Permanent Forum on Indigenous
Issues and urge the UN to secure all the necessary political, institutional
and financial support so that it can function effectively according to its mandate
as contained in ECOSOC Resolution E/2000/22. We support the continuation of
the United Nations Working Group on Indigenous Populations based on the importance
of its mandate to set international standards on the rights of Indigenous Peoples.
We call for a World Conference on Indigenous Peoples and Sustainable Development
as a culmination of the United Nations International Decade for the World's
Indigenous Peoples (1995-2004) and as a concrete follow-up to the World Summit
on Sustainable Development.
We continue to meet in the spirit of unity inspired by the Khoi-San people
and their hospitality. We reaffirm our mutual solidarity as Indigenous Peoples
of the world in our struggle for social and environmental justice.
* Including the Draft Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples;
the Charter of the International Alliance of Indigenous and Tribal Peoples
of the Tropical Forests; the Mataatua Declaration; the Santa Cruz Declaration
on Intellectual Property; the Leticia Declaration of Indigenous Peoples
and Other Forest Dependent Peoples on the Sustainable Use and Management
of All Types of Forests; the Charter of Indigenous Peoples of the Arctic
and the Far East Siberia; the Bali Indigenous Peoples Political Declaration;
and, the Declaration of the Indigenous Peoples of Eastern Africa in the
Regional WSSD Preparatory Meeting.
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